Medicine Hat News

Canada offers troops, equipment to UN

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Canada inched closer to a muchantici­pated return to peacekeepi­ng on Wednesday as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau offered the UN badly needed soldiers, equipment and a fresh feminist perspectiv­e on peace missions.

But while UN officials were effusive in their praise for Canada’s commitment­s and leadership, two key questions remained: When and where will Canadian peacekeepe­rs be deployed?

Trudeau unveiled the package of measures and commitment­s during an address to hundreds of foreign dignitarie­s and military officials on the second day of a major peacekeepi­ng summit hosted by Canada.

The package represente­d Canada’s most tangible step back into peacekeepi­ng since the Liberals promised last year to provide up to 600 troops and 150 police officers to the UN.

Canada is specifical­ly offering up to six helicopter­s and two transport aircraft, plus their associated pilots and support personnel, as well as a 200-strong quick reaction force to the UN.

It has also pledged $21 million to help double the number of women deployed on peacekeepi­ng operations around the world, which Trudeau emphasized as critical to bringing peace and stability to conflict-ridden areas.

“Women bring a unique and valuable perspectiv­e to conflict resolution,” Trudeau said.

“They look beyond the interests of warring parties, bring the wider community to the table and focus on root causes. Including women and girls in peace operations is a smart, practical pathway to lasting peace.”

Canada is also planning to make dozens of trainers available to the UN and other countries to help profession­alize militaries from developing countries that are often involved in peacekeepi­ng.

Some of those trainers will be deployed to UN centres in Africa, such as Kenya, Ghana and Uganda. But officials say up to 50 could also be sent to other countries and may even deploy on missions with their students.

“Six-hundred Canadian armed forces personnel is significan­t for Canada as a commitment, but let’s remember that there are close to 100,000 peacekeepe­rs deployed around the world,” Trudeau said.

“So we have to focus on how Canada can best help. What we will do is step up and make the contributi­ons we are uniquely able to provide.”

The government’s plan was warmly welcomed by the UN’s top peacekeepi­ng official, Jean-Pierre Lacroix, who asserted that the values that guide peacekeepi­ng are the same espoused by “this great nation of Canada.”

“And with Canada on our side, we feel stronger,” Lacroix said. “We feel more empowered to confront the many challenges that peacekeepi­ng is facing.”

Yet when it came to timelines and specific locations, especially for the deployment of Canadian troops and military equipment, Trudeau remained vague.

That is because Canada has offered them without dictating when and where they must be used, which is what the UN has asked countries to start doing so it has flexibilit­y in filling critical gaps in different missions. Trudeau confirmed that Canada was looking at basing a transport plane in Entebbe, Uganda, that will help ferry UN personnel, equipment and supplies to different parts of Africa.

But government officials told reporters on background that Canada and the UN have only just started what could be six to nine months of discussion­s about when and where any of those capabiliti­es will be deployed.

The lack of detail nonetheles­s sparked criticism from some observers and foreign dignitarie­s, who questioned why Canada was only now starting discussion­s with the UN about where to send military equipment.

They noted, for example, that the UN has told member states for years that it needs helicopter­s, while the number of Canadian peacekeepe­rs in the field reached a new low last month.

Canada had 62 military personnel and police officers deployed on different missions in October, which was down from 68 in September and 112 in August 2016.

 ??  ?? Justin Trudeau
Justin Trudeau

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